Inside the issue, "Rolling Stone" uncovers new details about the night Tsarnaev was captured. As he was hiding in the boat in Watertown, police negotiators told him his old wrestling coach had made a public plea for him to surrender. Police said reminding him of his old life was what convinced him to surrender.

The magazine reports Dzhokhar once hinted that the thought the 9/11 attacks could be justified. He allegedly told a friend who wanted to meet older brother, Tamerlan, "No, You don't want to meet him."

Rolling Stone claims Tamerlan Tsarnaev once told his mother he felt like there were "two people" inside him. She believed religion would cure him.

Some local residents vowed to stop reading the magazine.

"That's so strange. You do something horrible and there's fame?" one resident said.

"I was there that day, and my son still talks about the horror the two bombs, the blood. All I want is justice," another resident said.

Minute-by-minute: How bombers attacked, evidence hidden

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New information continues to emerge about the two suspects in the Boston Marathon Bombing. Federal documents breakdown how the Boston Bombing suspects reportedly carried out the attack, and show how close friends attempted to hide evidence from investigators.